Monday, April 28, 2014

Why can't Cathy and Joanne get married in my church?

This morning I spoke at a press conference along with two
members of my congregation, Joanne and Cathy, and other folks from around North
Carolina who are challenging the state’s marriage laws. Yeah, I know, these
court cases are popping up all over the country. But this one is different from
any other because it is challenging our state’s marriage laws as a violation of
the First Amendment to our U.S. Constitution that guarantees religious freedom.
And that’s why I wanted to be a part of it.

If you know me at all, you know something about the
extraordinary congregation I serve in Charlotte. Long before I arrived at Holy
Trinity Lutheran Church nine years ago, they were known as a faith community that welcomes gay
folks fully into the life of the congregation. In fact, they were so over all
the gay controversy by the time I came to serve them that sexual orientation
was a complete non-issue. Our mission of “Loving Not Judging” continues to
attract people who have, for one reason or another, been damaged by other
Christian congregations in the past. The folks at Holy Trinity are the real
deal; you never met such a loving church in your life. (They’re even loving
toward their pastor who has a tendency to go off the deep end from time to
time.)

Since I’ve been at Holy Trinity, I’ve performed a lot of
ceremonies for same-sex couples. We’ve called them a variety of things:
Blessing of Rings, Commitment Ceremony, Holy Union, etc. Somewhere along the
way, we started calling them a Marriage and we use the Lutheran liturgy from
our hymnal with just a couple of slight changes in language. These have always
been joyful celebrations with the faith community gathered around the couple in
prayer. But they differed from the other weddings at which I officiated because
I never signed a marriage license. We all knew that it was a marriage only in
the “eyes of God” and settled for that because it’s all we had at the time.

Two years ago, there was a shift in my congregation. That’s
when about 20% of North Carolina's voters made the decision for all of us to favor
Amendment One, which defines marriage as something that happens between a man
and a woman, period. (This was already the law in N.C., but Amendment One was
an attempt to make sure nobody could ever come along and change that.) At Holy
Trinity we worked hard against Amendment One because it was an affront to our core
values as a congregation. When it passed, we were devastated. Many of the
same-gender couples in my congregation gave up hope of ever seeing a change in
North Carolina during their lifetime.

At the same time, in other states, opportunities for
same-gender couples to marry were popping up. What was to prevent couples from my congregation from
going elsewhere to do what they could never do in North Carolina? So,
one-by-one, I have watched parishioners go outside North
Carolina to marry. It’s been a year now since I have married a same-gender
couple in my church. I understand why they go out-of-state to marry and don’t
blame them for doing so. But it grieves my heart as their pastor.

Can you imagine what it would be like if we had to tell all
of our heterosexual couples that they cannot be married in their home state,
within the faith communities that love and support them by the clergy who have
developed a relationship with them? It’s a ludicrous scenario, isn’t it?
Because for people who are deeply connected with their pastors and their faith
communities, we expect their weddings to take place within that context. And
yet, for a large number of the couples in my congregation, that’s not possible.

Can anyone tell me how this is not a violation of our
freedom to practice our religion in a way that is consistent with our beliefs? Of
course I would never tell another pastor or congregation that they must marry
same gender couples if doing so went against their deeply held beliefs. But why
is it okay for those who disagree with the religious beliefs of my faith community
to decide how we may or may not be able to practice those beliefs?

In the course of pursuing this litigation, I learned that it
is a criminal offense for clergy to preside over a wedding or anything that
looks like a wedding for same-gender couples in the State of North Carolina. Oops! Maybe all of us clergy who
have performed ceremonies for same-gender couples in North Carolina should turn
ourselves in. People would be surprised to learn how many of us there are. But
how can those of us who support the loving relationships of same-gender couples
do otherwise?

In the same way, as someone who serves as Pastor at Holy
Trinity Lutheran Church in Charlotte, I don’t know how I could have chosen NOT
to be a Plaintiff in this case. I had no choice if I wanted to faithfully serve my
people.

Among those people are Joanne Marinaro and Cathy Fry, who are also Plaintiffs.
Joanne and Cathy have been together for 28 years. They have two grown children. Members of Holy Trinity for 25 years, they are loved and
respected in the congregation. They have lived quietly alongside their neighbors as any other family. They have never been out to prove a point in the way they live. They have only been living their lives in the only way they could as the women God created them to be. And yet, now they are putting themselves in the spotlight because they believe the time for change has come. I have so much admiration for them as they have taken this step. While it feels to me that serving as a Plaintiff is part of my job as Pastor at Holy Trinity, for Cathy and Joanne, this is their life.

Lately, when we’re together, I’ve noticed that the topic of our conversation has changed. We’ve been talking a lot about their wedding. And when we do, we don’t speculate about whether or not it will ever happen. Yes, it will. It will happen in Charlotte, at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. I’ll have the honor of officiating. And they will be surrounded by the faith community that has loved and supported them through the years as they raised their children. I am so looking forward to that day. I’m already thinking about what I’ll say in my homily. If I can do it through the tears.

4 comments:

Beautifully stated and very true. We love, admire, and respect Cathy and Joanne and look forward to their wedding at Holy Trinity. We'll be in the audience with smiles and tears of joy. You may even get to officiate for Aaron and myself when we reach that day in NC. Much love to you for speaking out and being an example of "Loving not Judging".

About Me

Nancy is an ordained pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. She serves at Ascension Lutheran Church in Towson, Maryland. Nancy grew up in Hamilton, Ohio, and then served time at Bowling Green State University, before moving on to Trinity Seminary in Columbus. Starting out in North Dakota, she then returned to Ohio and served churches there before landing in North Carolina, where she served at two different congregations in Charlotte. She was also on the bishop's staff and earned a PhD from Pitt during her spare time in the area of religion and education. She considers herself an educator who happens to be a pastor and it makes a difference in how she does ministry. She is a divorce survivor, and the mother of two artsy-fartsy children who abandoned her when they became adults. Now she shares a home with Father Guido Sarducci, her tuxedo cat.